We appreciate the enormous support that our ABestWeb community has experienced over the many years it has served its members and sponsors. We have decided to exit this business and have placed the property up for sale and we are actively entertaining interest.

In the meantime, community members will be able to read but not post to ABestWeb beginning on Jan. 18.

We want to thank you for your numerous contributions and your ongoing support. If you have any questions, please let us know.

Recently i have joined as a email marketing executive. I have learned all things about email marketing but many of my company emails going to spam folder not to inbox folder. So that, My users unable to receive information from my company. I need some suggestions to avoid this spam. Please give suggestions whatever you know. Thanks in advance.

In the US people have to agree that they want to recieve the emails, or they can report them as spam. Double opt-in is the required standard. If many of your emails are going into Spam folders, emails from your company have probably been reported as spam to the ISPs, which you'll have to deal with on a case-by-case basis. You should also examine the design of your emails to see which guidelines they violate that may trigger a spam designation.

In the US people have to agree that they want to recieve the emails, or they can report them as spam. Double opt-in is the required standard. If many of your emails are going into Spam folders, emails from your company have probably been reported as spam to the ISPs, which you'll have to deal with on a case-by-case basis. You should also examine the design of your emails to see which guidelines they violate that may trigger a spam designation.

The double opt-in process will reduce the chances of your emails to people who subscribe after you start it being reported as spam. Your current subscribers might still report your emails as spam.

One merchant I worked with got reported as a spammer because he subscribed customers to his newsletter mailing list without asking them if they wanted to be on it. He then had to email the entire list and invite them to subscribe. If they didn't subscribe at that point, they were off his mailing list. That was years ago, and he's still in business.

You can reduce the chances of your emails triggering spam filters by avoiding certain words. See these articles: